Journalistic Responsibility Vanishes When
Reporting On US-Targeted Nations
By Caitlin Johnstone
November 18, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- Two false news
reports have gone viral in recent hours due to
sloppy sourcing and journalistic malpractice. As
usual they both featured bogus claims about
US-targeted nations, in this case Russia and
Iran.
An article in Responsible Statecraft titled “How
a lightly-sourced AP story almost set off World
War III” details how the propaganda
multiplier news agency published a
one-source,
one-sentence report claiming that Russia had
launched a deadly missile strike at NATO member
Poland, despite
evidence having already
come to light by that point that the missile
had probably come from Ukraine. This
set off calls for the implementation of a
NATO Article 5 response, meaning hot warfare
between NATO and Russia in retaliation for a
Russian attack on one of the alliance members.
Mainstream news reports circulated the
narrative that Poland had been struck by a
“Russian-made” missile, which is at best a
highly misleading framing of the fact that the
inadvertent strike came from a Soviet-era
surface-to-air missile system still used by
Ukraine, a former Soviet state. Headlines from
the largest and most influential US news outlets
like The New
York Times,
CNN and NBC all
repeated the misleading “Russian-made” framing,
as did
AP’s own correction to its false report that
Poland was struck by Russia.
All current evidence indicates that Poland
was accidentally hit by one of those missiles
while Ukraine was defending itself from Russian
missile strikes. President Biden has
said it’s “unlikely” that the missile which
killed two Poles came from Russia, while Polish
president Andrzej Duda and NATO secretary
general Jens Stoltenberg
both said
it looks like it was an accidental strike from
Ukrainian air defenses. Russia
says its own missile strikes have been no
closer than 35 km from the Polish border.
The only party still adamantly insisting that
the strike did come from Russia
is Ukraine, leading an exasperated diplomat
from a NATO country to anonymously
tell Financial Times: “This is getting
ridiculous. The Ukrainians are destroying [our]
confidence in them. Nobody is blaming Ukraine
and they are openly lying. This is more
destructive than the missile.”
It is very sleazy for AP to continue to
protect the anonymity of the US official who fed
them a lie of such immense significance and
potential consequence. They should tell the
world who it was who initiated that lie so we
can demand explanations and accountability.
Another false story that went extremely viral
was one that Newsweek has been forced to
extensively revise and correct that was
initially titled “Iran
Votes to Execute Protesters, Says Rebels Need
‘Hard Lesson’,” but is now titled “Iran
Parliament Chants ‘Death to Seditionists’ in
Protest Punishment Call.” The latest
correction notice now reads, “This article
and headline were updated to remove the
reference to the Iranian Parliament voting for
death sentences. A majority of the parliament
supported a letter to the judiciary calling for
harsh punishments of protesters, which could
include the death penalty.”
Moon of Alabama
explains how the Newsweek piece was the
springboard that launched the viral false claim
that the Iranian government had just sentenced
15,000 protesters to death, which was circulated
by countless politicians, pundits and
celebrities throughout social media. This claim
has been debunked by mainstream outlets like
NBC News, who explains that “There has been
no evidence that 15,000 protesters have been
sentenced to death. Two protesters had been
sentenced to death as of Tuesday, although they
can appeal, according to state news agencies.”
An article by The Cradle titled “Fact
check – Iran has not sentenced ‘15,000’
protesters to death” explains that the
Iranian parliament actually just signed a letter
urging the Iranian judiciary to issue harsher
sentences upon protesters who’ve been
demonstrating against Tehran. Those sentences
can include the death penalty as noted
above, but up to this point have more often
entailed prison sentences of five to ten years.
The Cradle also notes that even the “15,000”
figure is suspect, as its sole source is an
American organization funded by the US
government’s National Endowment for Democracy:
Further muddying the waters, the figure
of 15,000 protesters detained by Iranian
authorities originates from the Human Rights
Activists News Agency (HRANA).
US-based HRANA is the media arm of the
Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRAI), a
group that receives funding from the
National Endowment for Democracy (NED) – a
CIA soft power front that has for decades
funded regime-change efforts across the
globe.
Indeed, it’s public knowledge that NED is
funded directly by the US government, and
that according
to its own cofounder was set up to
do overtly what the CIA used to do covertly.
It’s possible that the 15,000 figure could be
more or less accurate, and it’s possible that a
great many more Iranian protesters will be
sentenced to death for their actions, but
reporting such possibilities as a currently
established fact is plainly journalistic
malpractice.
In April of this year Newsweek published an
article titled “Russians
Raped 11-Year-Old Boy, Forced Mom to Watch:
Ukraine Official.” In May of this year
Newsweek published an article titled “Ukraine
Official Fired Over Handling of Russian Sexual
Assault Claims.” It
was the same official. Newsweek made no
mention of the fact that its source for its
sexual assault story had just been fired for
disseminating unevidenced claims about sexual
assault. To this day its April report contains
no updates or corrections.
Contrast this complete dereliction of
journalistic responsibility with
Newsweek’s extreme caution when one of its
reporters tried to report on the OPCW
scandal which disrupted the US government
narrative about an alleged chemical weapons
attack by the Syrian government. Reporter Tareq
Haddad was forbidden by his superiors to write
about the many leaks coming out
exposing malfeasance in the Douma investigation
by the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons, on the basis that NED-funded
Bellingcat had disputed the leaks and that other
respectable outlets had not reported on them.
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting has
published numerous articles documenting what
Adam Johnson calls
the North Korea Law of Journalism, which
holds that “editorial standards are inversely
proportional to a country’s enemy status.” In
other words, the more disfavorably a foreign
government is viewed by the US empire, the lower
the editorial standards for reporting claims
about them. Because Russia and Iran are both
viewed as enemies of Washington, western news
media often feel comfortable just publishing any
old claim about them as fact regardless of
sourcing or evidence.
We saw this highlighted during the insanity
of Russiagate, where
mainstream
news outlet after mainstream news outlet was
caught publishing unevidenced conspiratorial
hogwash that it was often (though not even
always) forced to retract. This was possible
because when it comes to implicating Russia the
evidentiary standards for reporting on something
are much lower than they would be for
implicating a government that is held in favor
by the US.
And this is the case because the western
mainstream media are the propaganda services of
the US-centralized empire. They do not exist to
tell people the truth, they exist to manipulate
the public into hating the official enemies of
the empire and into consenting to foreign policy
agendas that they would not otherwise consent
to.
Imperial propagandists lower their editorial
standards when reporting on official enemies not
because they are bad at their job, but because
they are very good at their job. It’s just that
their job isn’t what we’ve been told.
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in this article are
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